Deck 13: Capital Interest Entrepreneurship and Corporate Finance

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Question
Saving is necessary for production because

A)more roundabout production is better
B)less roundabout production is better
C)production takes time
D)production is expensive
E)production requires labor
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Question
If an economy increases the amount of roundabout production today,

A)more consumer goods can be produced in the present
B)fewer consumer goods can be produced in the future
C)more capital accumulates
D)less capital accumulates
E)fewer capital goods can be produced in the future
Question
Increased saving today means

A)more consumption today and in the future
B)less consumption today and in the future
C)more consumption today and less in the future
D)less consumption today and more in the future
E)more income today, but the net effect of increased income on the balance between consumption and saving cannot be determined
In advance
Question
The benefit of the production of capital is

A)decreased current production of consumption goods
B)increased future production of consumption goods
C)the amount of roundabout production
D)abundant capital accumulation
E)the decreased amount of future capital available
Question
For the typical consumer, present consumption is

A)preferred to future consumption
B)not preferred to future consumption
C)preferred to future saving
D)not preferred to future saving
E)financed out of present saving
Question
Which of the following does not reflect a positive rate of time preference?

A)People are willing to pay high prices to see new movies at first­ run theaters.
B)A bank pays interest on savings accounts.
C)Ed puts money in his mattress for a rainy day.
D)Dry cleaners that provide faster service can charge more.
E)A college freshman parties all semester, then stays awake studying for 50 straight hours during final exam week.
Question
The opportunity cost of producing capital is

A)decreased current production of consumption goods
B)increased future production of consumption goods
C)the amount of roundabout production
D)abundant capital accumulation
E)the decreased amount of future capital available
Question
Saving is

A)helpful for production but not necessary
B)not useful for production because they imply a decrease in consumption
C)required for production
D)not useful for production because it is not a resource
E)not useful for production because savers must be paid interest
Question
Which of the following is an example of roundabout production?

A)A farmer switches from growing soybeans to growing wheat, getting fewer crops per year as a result.
B)A farmer switches from growing soybeans to growing wheat, getting more crops per year as a result.
C)A self­employed dressmaker becomes a wage worker at a factory that makes dresses.
D)A coal mine is sold by its owners to its workers and run as a cooperative.
E)A telemarketing firm declares a holiday for two days while a new phone system is installed.
Question
Which of the following is an example of roundabout production?

A)Paul pays Ringo to wash his car.
B)A church has a bake sale to raise money for a new narthex.
C)Jane saves her money to buy a stereo.
D)Robinson Crusoe makes a fish net to help him catch more fish per day.
E)Business owners in Minneapolis buy blocks of Minnesota Twins baseball tickets to help guarantee that the team will stay in town.
Question
Goods and activities typically are more highly valued the sooner they can be enjoyed, otherthings constant,

A)only when interest rates are positive
B)because interest rates are positive
C)only when people save
D)because people save
E)because people have positive rates of time preference
Question
Roundabout production occurs when

A)entrepreneurs hire others to work for them, rather than taking the time to produce things themselves
B)workers avoid intermediary entrepreneurs and cooperate to produce output themselves
C)inefficient technology is used
D)producers make capital goods instead of consumption goods
E)a company takes time to market shares in the company
Question
Because present consumption is more highly valued higher than future consumption, interestis paid.
Question
The production of capital is a form of roundabout production.
Question
The production of capital goods, which are then used to produce consumer goods, is called

A)efficient production
B)intermediation
C)time preferences
D)roundabout production
E)derived production
Question
Production cannot occur without

A)saving
B)government
C)a market system
D)low interest rates
E)high interest rates
Question
Most companies that sell CDs by mail deliver in 1 to 2 weeks.Mosey Music, Inc., takes 4weeks to deliver CDs.We should expect that Mosey Music

A)will lose all its customers
B)will not lose customers because the good in question is CDs, not the delivery date
C)will have to charge more for its CDs to make up for the business it loses through slow delivery
D)will have to charge less for its CDs to compete with firms that deliver CDs faster
E)will be able to charge the same amount for its CDs as other firms do, as long as the CD quality is the same
Question
The rate of time preference is positive

A)only when interest rates are positive
B)because interest rates are positive
C)only when people save
D)because people save
E)because people prefer goods now to the same goods later
Question
If a person produces capital goods, she sacrifices current production of consumer goods inorder to obtain the capability of producing more goods and services in the future.This iscalled roundabout production.
Question
Another term for an investment good is

A)interest
B)savings
C)capital
D)rent
E)production
Question
If the annual interest rate is 5 percent,

A)$100 saved today will be worth $105 after one year
B)$90 saved today will be worth $100 after one year
C)$100 saved today will be worth $5 after one year
D)$99 saved today will be worth $100 after one year
E)$100 saved today will be worth $1,000 after one year
Question
If the market interest rate increases, then

A)the cost of borrowing increases and so saving falls
B)the opportunity cost of consuming a good in the future increases and saving, therefore, increases
C)the opportunity cost of consuming a good in the future increases and saving, therefore, falls
D)the reward for saving diminishes and so present consumption increases
E)the reward for saving increases and so saving increases
Question
A positive rate of time preference means that

A)time is relative to consumption
B)consumption in the future is more important than consumption today
C)consumption today is valued less than consumption in the future
D)consumption in the future is valued less than consumption today
E)consumption in the future and consumption today are positively related
Question
<strong>  Given the data in Exhibit 13­2, the marginal product is</strong> A)positive for all copy machines B)positive for the first copy machine only C)positive for the first four copy machines only D)positive for the first five copy machines only E)never positive <div style=padding-top: 35px> Given the data in Exhibit 13­2, the marginal product is

A)positive for all copy machines
B)positive for the first copy machine only
C)positive for the first four copy machines only
D)positive for the first five copy machines only
E)never positive
Question
If the annual interest rate is 4 percent, a consumer who spends $100 today

A)will have to pay back $104 to the bank
B)would have to pay $104 next year to get the same goods
C)will receive $96 from the bank next year
D)would have to pay $96 next year to get the same goods
E)is giving up the ability to spend $104 on goods next year
Question
Which of the following does not reflect a positive rate of time preference?

A)Concert­goers yell and scream when the stage is still dark an hour after the concert was scheduled to start.
B)Borrowers have to pay interest on loans.
C)A dieter, allowed three ounces of butter per day, spends the whole allotment on her toast at breakfast.
D)A dieter, allowed three ounces of butter per day, promises himself some new clothes if he can break the habit of spending the
Whole allotment on his toast at breakfast.
E)A student stays up late every night for a week to finish her term paper two months before it is due.
Question
A profit­maximizing firm invests up to the point at which the marginal rate of return oncapital is greatest.
Question
The interest rate compensates

A)bankers for their time spent on paperwork
B)borrowers for their increased consumption today
C)savers for consumption forgone today
D)consumers for more consumption today
E)the Fed for its efforts to control the money supply
Question
<strong>    The marginal product of the seventh copy machine listed in Exhibit 13­2 is</strong> A)­5 copies B)5 copies C)25 copies D)135 copies E)165 copies <div style=padding-top: 35px> <strong>    The marginal product of the seventh copy machine listed in Exhibit 13­2 is</strong> A)­5 copies B)5 copies C)25 copies D)135 copies E)165 copies <div style=padding-top: 35px> The marginal product of the seventh copy machine listed in Exhibit 13­2 is

A)­5 copies
B)5 copies
C)25 copies
D)135 copies
E)165 copies
Question
The difference between income and consumption is

A)rent
B)profit
C)saving
D)opportunity cost
E)roundabout consumption
Question
If Arnold has a positive rate of time preference, he desires to

A)save in case of inflation
B)consume now rather than later
C)invest in stocks and bonds
D)invest in education
E)plan for retirement
Question
<strong>  The marginal product of the third copy machine listed in Exhibit 13­2 is</strong> A)4 copies B)6 copies C)24 copies D)28 copies E)52 copies <div style=padding-top: 35px> The marginal product of the third copy machine listed in Exhibit 13­2 is

A)4 copies
B)6 copies
C)24 copies
D)28 copies
E)52 copies
Question
The old adage that "a bird in the hand is worth two in the bush" refers to

A)a normal good
B)opportunity cost
C)scarcity
D)a positive rate of time preference
E)a willingness to forgo current consumption in order to achieve increased future consumption
Question
The reward for forgoing present consumption is

A)rent
B)profit
C)roundabout production
D)transfer payment
E)interest
Question
If people have a positive rate of time preference, they

A)must be rewarded for saving
B)are willing to pay more for a good that saves them money if they hold on to it a long time
C)prefer to consume in the future when things are cheaper
D)prefer time deposits to savings accounts
E)prefer leisure over labor
Question
In order to predict the marginal rate of return on investment, producers must forecast theinterest rate.
Question
The marginal rate of return on investment is found by dividing the marginal resource cost peryear by the marginal revenue product.
Question
The reward offered to households to refrain from spending their income on currentconsumption and instead save their income is

A)rent
B)credit
C)utility
D)interest
E)forgone utility
Question
If we assume that a unit of capital will last indefinitely, the marginal rate of return oninvestment equals the marginal revenue product of capital divided by its marginal resourcecost.
Question
If the interest rate increases from 6 percent to 10 percent per year, each $100 saved willearn

A)$4 per year more than before
B)$6 per year more than before
C)$10 per year more than before
D)$16 per year more than before
E)$60 per year more than before
Question
A marginal revenue product curve shows the change in

A)total revenue caused by a one­unit change in output, other things constant
B)total revenue caused by a one­unit change in an input, other things constant
C)total product caused by a one­unit change in output, other things constant
D)total product caused by a one­unit change in an input, other things constant
E)total revenue product caused by a one­unit change in the price of the output, other things constant
Question
For a firm that is a price taker in the product market, all of the following are true except one.Which one is the exception?

A)Marginal revenue product can be found by multiplying price by marginal product.
B)Marginal revenue product is the change in total revenue that results from increasing the use of a resource by one unit, other
Things constant.
C)Marginal revenue product is constant at the prevailing price.
D)Increased output by the firm has no impact on the price of the product.
E)The marginal revenue product curve declines because of diminishing marginal returns.
Question
<strong>  Exhibit 13­3 gives data on the number of tools a certain firm buys to use in its productionprocess.Assume that the tools are expected to last indefinitely, that operating expenses arenegligible, and that the price of the firm's output is expected to remain constant in the future.At what interest rate would the firm in Exhibit 13­3 choose to buy 3 machines?</strong> A)5% B)8% C)12% D)20% E)24% <div style=padding-top: 35px> Exhibit 13­3 gives data on the number of tools a certain firm buys to use in its productionprocess.Assume that the tools are expected to last indefinitely, that operating expenses arenegligible, and that the price of the firm's output is expected to remain constant in the future.At what interest rate would the firm in Exhibit 13­3 choose to buy 3 machines?

A)5%
B)8%
C)12%
D)20%
E)24%
Question
<strong>    Exhibit 13­4 shows data gathered by Memo Co.as it prepares to purchase personalcomputers for its sales offices.Given the data in Exhibit 13­4, Memo Co.</strong> A)must be a perfectly competitive seller of output B)must be a monopoly seller of output C)must be a perfectly competitive buyer of personal computers D)cannot be a perfectly competitive buyer of personal computers E)may or may not be a perfectly competitive buyer of personal computers <div style=padding-top: 35px> <strong>    Exhibit 13­4 shows data gathered by Memo Co.as it prepares to purchase personalcomputers for its sales offices.Given the data in Exhibit 13­4, Memo Co.</strong> A)must be a perfectly competitive seller of output B)must be a monopoly seller of output C)must be a perfectly competitive buyer of personal computers D)cannot be a perfectly competitive buyer of personal computers E)may or may not be a perfectly competitive buyer of personal computers <div style=padding-top: 35px> Exhibit 13­4 shows data gathered by Memo Co.as it prepares to purchase personalcomputers for its sales offices.Given the data in Exhibit 13­4, Memo Co.

A)must be a perfectly competitive seller of output
B)must be a monopoly seller of output
C)must be a perfectly competitive buyer of personal computers
D)cannot be a perfectly competitive buyer of personal computers
E)may or may not be a perfectly competitive buyer of personal computers
Question
<strong>    Suppose that the data in Exhibit 13­2 describes a shop that sells photocopies at $0.10 each.At this price, the marginal revenue product of the fourth machine is</strong> A)$0.10 B)$0.40 C)$4 D)$40 E)$400 <div style=padding-top: 35px> <strong>    Suppose that the data in Exhibit 13­2 describes a shop that sells photocopies at $0.10 each.At this price, the marginal revenue product of the fourth machine is</strong> A)$0.10 B)$0.40 C)$4 D)$40 E)$400 <div style=padding-top: 35px> Suppose that the data in Exhibit 13­2 describes a shop that sells photocopies at $0.10 each.At this price, the marginal revenue product of the fourth machine is

A)$0.10
B)$0.40
C)$4
D)$40
E)$400
Question
<strong>  One reason for the decline in output with the seventh machine in Exhibit 13­2 could be that</strong> A)the increase in the company's power consumption when seven machines are being used causes its electricity bills to be much Higher B)the increase in the company's power consumption when seven machines are being used causes fuses to blow more often C)no one uses the seventh machine; only six are necessary D)no one uses the seventh machine; only five are necessary E)workers no longer have to wait in line to make copies because more machines are available <div style=padding-top: 35px> One reason for the decline in output with the seventh machine in Exhibit 13­2 could be that

A)the increase in the company's power consumption when seven machines are being used causes its electricity bills to be much
Higher
B)the increase in the company's power consumption when seven machines are being used causes fuses to blow more often
C)no one uses the seventh machine; only six are necessary
D)no one uses the seventh machine; only five are necessary
E)workers no longer have to wait in line to make copies because more machines are available
Question
All types of capital

A)are forms of resources that can be used in future production
B)require a physical existence
C)earn an economic rent
D)yield profits for their owners
E)require obtaining more education and job skills
Question
<strong>  Exhibit 13­4 shows data gathered by Memo Co.as it prepares to purchase personalcomputers for its sales offices.Assume that the personal computers are expected to lastindefinitely, that operating expenses are negligible, and that the price of Memo's product isexpected to remain constant in the future.Given the rate of interest, how many personalcomputers will Memo Co.select?</strong> A)40 B)60 C)80 D)100 E)120 <div style=padding-top: 35px> Exhibit 13­4 shows data gathered by Memo Co.as it prepares to purchase personalcomputers for its sales offices.Assume that the personal computers are expected to lastindefinitely, that operating expenses are negligible, and that the price of Memo's product isexpected to remain constant in the future.Given the rate of interest, how many personalcomputers will Memo Co.select?

A)40
B)60
C)80
D)100
E)120
Question
<strong>  Exhibit 13­3 gives data on the number of tools a certain firm buys to use in its productionprocess.Assume that the tools are expected to last indefinitely, that operating expenses arenegligible, and that the price of the firm's output is expected to remain constant in the future.At an interest rate of 10 percent, the firm in Exhibit 13­3 should select</strong> A)the maximum number of tools available because price does not decrease as output increases B)the minimum number of tools available because price does not increase as output increases C)three tools D)four tools E)five tools <div style=padding-top: 35px> Exhibit 13­3 gives data on the number of tools a certain firm buys to use in its productionprocess.Assume that the tools are expected to last indefinitely, that operating expenses arenegligible, and that the price of the firm's output is expected to remain constant in the future.At an interest rate of 10 percent, the firm in Exhibit 13­3 should select

A)the maximum number of tools available because price does not decrease as output increases
B)the minimum number of tools available because price does not increase as output increases
C)three tools
D)four tools
E)five tools
Question
<strong>  Exhibit 13­4 shows data gathered by Memo Co.as it prepares to purchase personalcomputers for its sales offices.Given the data in Exhibit 13­4, the price of personalcomputers must be</strong> A)$5,000 each B)$500 each C)$250 each D)$200 each E)increasing as Memo Co.purchases more personal computers <div style=padding-top: 35px> Exhibit 13­4 shows data gathered by Memo Co.as it prepares to purchase personalcomputers for its sales offices.Given the data in Exhibit 13­4, the price of personalcomputers must be

A)$5,000 each
B)$500 each
C)$250 each
D)$200 each
E)increasing as Memo Co.purchases more personal computers
Question
If a firm can borrow or lend at a 10 percent annual interest rate, it will

A)buy all units of capital with a marginal rate of return above 10 percent
B)buy all units of capital with an average rate of return above 10 percent
C)buy all units of capital with a marginal rate of return below 10 percent
D)buy all units of capital with an average rate of return below 10 percent
E)select only the unit of capital with the highest marginal rate of return, assuming it is above 10 percent
Question
Marginal revenue product for a price taker equals

A)MP × P
B)MP/MRC
C)MP × MRC
D)MRC/MP
E)MP/P
Question
Exhibit 13­3 <strong>Exhibit 13­3   Exhibit 13­3 gives data on the number of tools a certain firm buys to use in its productionprocess.Assume that the tools are expected to last indefinitely, that operating expenses arenegligible, and that the price of the firm's output is expected to remain constant in the future.At an interest rate of 7 percent, the firm in Exhibit 13­3 should select</strong> A)the maximum number of tools available because price does not decrease as output increases B)the minimum number of tools available because price does not increase as output increases C)three tools D)four tools E)five tools <div style=padding-top: 35px> Exhibit 13­3 gives data on the number of tools a certain firm buys to use in its productionprocess.Assume that the tools are expected to last indefinitely, that operating expenses arenegligible, and that the price of the firm's output is expected to remain constant in the future.At an interest rate of 7 percent, the firm in Exhibit 13­3 should select

A)the maximum number of tools available because price does not decrease as output increases
B)the minimum number of tools available because price does not increase as output increases
C)three tools
D)four tools
E)five tools
Question
) <strong>)   Exhibit 13­3 gives data on the number of tools a certain firm buys to use in its productionprocess.Assume that the tools are expected to last indefinitely, that operating expenses arenegligible, and that the price of the firm's output is expected to remain constant in the future.At what interest rate would the firm in Exhibit 13­3 choose not to buy any machines?</strong> A)10% B)20% C)30% D)35% E)40% <div style=padding-top: 35px> Exhibit 13­3 gives data on the number of tools a certain firm buys to use in its productionprocess.Assume that the tools are expected to last indefinitely, that operating expenses arenegligible, and that the price of the firm's output is expected to remain constant in the future.At what interest rate would the firm in Exhibit 13­3 choose not to buy any machines?

A)10%
B)20%
C)30%
D)35%
E)40%
Question
<strong>  Exhibit 13­4 shows data gathered by Memo Co.as it prepares to purchase personalcomputers for its sales offices.Assume that the personal computers are expected to lastindefinitely, that operating expenses are negligible, and that the price of Memo's product isexpected to remain constant in the future.The marginal rate of return on 60 personalcomputers is closest to</strong> A)19 percent B)24 percent C)30 percent D)52 percent E)520 percent <div style=padding-top: 35px> Exhibit 13­4 shows data gathered by Memo Co.as it prepares to purchase personalcomputers for its sales offices.Assume that the personal computers are expected to lastindefinitely, that operating expenses are negligible, and that the price of Memo's product isexpected to remain constant in the future.The marginal rate of return on 60 personalcomputers is closest to

A)19 percent
B)24 percent
C)30 percent
D)52 percent
E)520 percent
Question
) <strong>)     Exhibit 13­4 shows data gathered by Memo Co.as it prepares to purchase personalcomputers for its sales offices.Assume that the personal computers are expected to lastindefinitely, that operating expenses are negligible, and that the price of Memo's output isexpected to remain constant in the future.As the number of personal computers Memo Co.might purchase increases to 120, the marginal rate of return on that kind of capital will</strong> A)decrease from 24 percent and eventually become negative B)rise from 24 percent C)decrease from 24 percent but never become negative D)remain constant because the price of personal computers is constant E)remain constant because the increments being considered are constant <div style=padding-top: 35px> <strong>)     Exhibit 13­4 shows data gathered by Memo Co.as it prepares to purchase personalcomputers for its sales offices.Assume that the personal computers are expected to lastindefinitely, that operating expenses are negligible, and that the price of Memo's output isexpected to remain constant in the future.As the number of personal computers Memo Co.might purchase increases to 120, the marginal rate of return on that kind of capital will</strong> A)decrease from 24 percent and eventually become negative B)rise from 24 percent C)decrease from 24 percent but never become negative D)remain constant because the price of personal computers is constant E)remain constant because the increments being considered are constant <div style=padding-top: 35px> Exhibit 13­4 shows data gathered by Memo Co.as it prepares to purchase personalcomputers for its sales offices.Assume that the personal computers are expected to lastindefinitely, that operating expenses are negligible, and that the price of Memo's output isexpected to remain constant in the future.As the number of personal computers Memo Co.might purchase increases to 120, the marginal rate of return on that kind of capital will

A)decrease from 24 percent and eventually become negative
B)rise from 24 percent
C)decrease from 24 percent but never become negative
D)remain constant because the price of personal computers is constant
E)remain constant because the increments being considered are constant
Question
The concept of marginal productivity is applicable to

A)all of the following
B)capital
C)entrepreneurial talent
D)land
E)labor
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Deck 13: Capital Interest Entrepreneurship and Corporate Finance
1
Saving is necessary for production because

A)more roundabout production is better
B)less roundabout production is better
C)production takes time
D)production is expensive
E)production requires labor
C
2
If an economy increases the amount of roundabout production today,

A)more consumer goods can be produced in the present
B)fewer consumer goods can be produced in the future
C)more capital accumulates
D)less capital accumulates
E)fewer capital goods can be produced in the future
C
3
Increased saving today means

A)more consumption today and in the future
B)less consumption today and in the future
C)more consumption today and less in the future
D)less consumption today and more in the future
E)more income today, but the net effect of increased income on the balance between consumption and saving cannot be determined
In advance
D
4
The benefit of the production of capital is

A)decreased current production of consumption goods
B)increased future production of consumption goods
C)the amount of roundabout production
D)abundant capital accumulation
E)the decreased amount of future capital available
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5
For the typical consumer, present consumption is

A)preferred to future consumption
B)not preferred to future consumption
C)preferred to future saving
D)not preferred to future saving
E)financed out of present saving
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6
Which of the following does not reflect a positive rate of time preference?

A)People are willing to pay high prices to see new movies at first­ run theaters.
B)A bank pays interest on savings accounts.
C)Ed puts money in his mattress for a rainy day.
D)Dry cleaners that provide faster service can charge more.
E)A college freshman parties all semester, then stays awake studying for 50 straight hours during final exam week.
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7
The opportunity cost of producing capital is

A)decreased current production of consumption goods
B)increased future production of consumption goods
C)the amount of roundabout production
D)abundant capital accumulation
E)the decreased amount of future capital available
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8
Saving is

A)helpful for production but not necessary
B)not useful for production because they imply a decrease in consumption
C)required for production
D)not useful for production because it is not a resource
E)not useful for production because savers must be paid interest
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9
Which of the following is an example of roundabout production?

A)A farmer switches from growing soybeans to growing wheat, getting fewer crops per year as a result.
B)A farmer switches from growing soybeans to growing wheat, getting more crops per year as a result.
C)A self­employed dressmaker becomes a wage worker at a factory that makes dresses.
D)A coal mine is sold by its owners to its workers and run as a cooperative.
E)A telemarketing firm declares a holiday for two days while a new phone system is installed.
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10
Which of the following is an example of roundabout production?

A)Paul pays Ringo to wash his car.
B)A church has a bake sale to raise money for a new narthex.
C)Jane saves her money to buy a stereo.
D)Robinson Crusoe makes a fish net to help him catch more fish per day.
E)Business owners in Minneapolis buy blocks of Minnesota Twins baseball tickets to help guarantee that the team will stay in town.
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11
Goods and activities typically are more highly valued the sooner they can be enjoyed, otherthings constant,

A)only when interest rates are positive
B)because interest rates are positive
C)only when people save
D)because people save
E)because people have positive rates of time preference
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12
Roundabout production occurs when

A)entrepreneurs hire others to work for them, rather than taking the time to produce things themselves
B)workers avoid intermediary entrepreneurs and cooperate to produce output themselves
C)inefficient technology is used
D)producers make capital goods instead of consumption goods
E)a company takes time to market shares in the company
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13
Because present consumption is more highly valued higher than future consumption, interestis paid.
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14
The production of capital is a form of roundabout production.
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15
The production of capital goods, which are then used to produce consumer goods, is called

A)efficient production
B)intermediation
C)time preferences
D)roundabout production
E)derived production
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16
Production cannot occur without

A)saving
B)government
C)a market system
D)low interest rates
E)high interest rates
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17
Most companies that sell CDs by mail deliver in 1 to 2 weeks.Mosey Music, Inc., takes 4weeks to deliver CDs.We should expect that Mosey Music

A)will lose all its customers
B)will not lose customers because the good in question is CDs, not the delivery date
C)will have to charge more for its CDs to make up for the business it loses through slow delivery
D)will have to charge less for its CDs to compete with firms that deliver CDs faster
E)will be able to charge the same amount for its CDs as other firms do, as long as the CD quality is the same
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18
The rate of time preference is positive

A)only when interest rates are positive
B)because interest rates are positive
C)only when people save
D)because people save
E)because people prefer goods now to the same goods later
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19
If a person produces capital goods, she sacrifices current production of consumer goods inorder to obtain the capability of producing more goods and services in the future.This iscalled roundabout production.
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20
Another term for an investment good is

A)interest
B)savings
C)capital
D)rent
E)production
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21
If the annual interest rate is 5 percent,

A)$100 saved today will be worth $105 after one year
B)$90 saved today will be worth $100 after one year
C)$100 saved today will be worth $5 after one year
D)$99 saved today will be worth $100 after one year
E)$100 saved today will be worth $1,000 after one year
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22
If the market interest rate increases, then

A)the cost of borrowing increases and so saving falls
B)the opportunity cost of consuming a good in the future increases and saving, therefore, increases
C)the opportunity cost of consuming a good in the future increases and saving, therefore, falls
D)the reward for saving diminishes and so present consumption increases
E)the reward for saving increases and so saving increases
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23
A positive rate of time preference means that

A)time is relative to consumption
B)consumption in the future is more important than consumption today
C)consumption today is valued less than consumption in the future
D)consumption in the future is valued less than consumption today
E)consumption in the future and consumption today are positively related
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24
<strong>  Given the data in Exhibit 13­2, the marginal product is</strong> A)positive for all copy machines B)positive for the first copy machine only C)positive for the first four copy machines only D)positive for the first five copy machines only E)never positive Given the data in Exhibit 13­2, the marginal product is

A)positive for all copy machines
B)positive for the first copy machine only
C)positive for the first four copy machines only
D)positive for the first five copy machines only
E)never positive
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25
If the annual interest rate is 4 percent, a consumer who spends $100 today

A)will have to pay back $104 to the bank
B)would have to pay $104 next year to get the same goods
C)will receive $96 from the bank next year
D)would have to pay $96 next year to get the same goods
E)is giving up the ability to spend $104 on goods next year
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26
Which of the following does not reflect a positive rate of time preference?

A)Concert­goers yell and scream when the stage is still dark an hour after the concert was scheduled to start.
B)Borrowers have to pay interest on loans.
C)A dieter, allowed three ounces of butter per day, spends the whole allotment on her toast at breakfast.
D)A dieter, allowed three ounces of butter per day, promises himself some new clothes if he can break the habit of spending the
Whole allotment on his toast at breakfast.
E)A student stays up late every night for a week to finish her term paper two months before it is due.
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27
A profit­maximizing firm invests up to the point at which the marginal rate of return oncapital is greatest.
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28
The interest rate compensates

A)bankers for their time spent on paperwork
B)borrowers for their increased consumption today
C)savers for consumption forgone today
D)consumers for more consumption today
E)the Fed for its efforts to control the money supply
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29
<strong>    The marginal product of the seventh copy machine listed in Exhibit 13­2 is</strong> A)­5 copies B)5 copies C)25 copies D)135 copies E)165 copies <strong>    The marginal product of the seventh copy machine listed in Exhibit 13­2 is</strong> A)­5 copies B)5 copies C)25 copies D)135 copies E)165 copies The marginal product of the seventh copy machine listed in Exhibit 13­2 is

A)­5 copies
B)5 copies
C)25 copies
D)135 copies
E)165 copies
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30
The difference between income and consumption is

A)rent
B)profit
C)saving
D)opportunity cost
E)roundabout consumption
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31
If Arnold has a positive rate of time preference, he desires to

A)save in case of inflation
B)consume now rather than later
C)invest in stocks and bonds
D)invest in education
E)plan for retirement
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32
<strong>  The marginal product of the third copy machine listed in Exhibit 13­2 is</strong> A)4 copies B)6 copies C)24 copies D)28 copies E)52 copies The marginal product of the third copy machine listed in Exhibit 13­2 is

A)4 copies
B)6 copies
C)24 copies
D)28 copies
E)52 copies
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33
The old adage that "a bird in the hand is worth two in the bush" refers to

A)a normal good
B)opportunity cost
C)scarcity
D)a positive rate of time preference
E)a willingness to forgo current consumption in order to achieve increased future consumption
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34
The reward for forgoing present consumption is

A)rent
B)profit
C)roundabout production
D)transfer payment
E)interest
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35
If people have a positive rate of time preference, they

A)must be rewarded for saving
B)are willing to pay more for a good that saves them money if they hold on to it a long time
C)prefer to consume in the future when things are cheaper
D)prefer time deposits to savings accounts
E)prefer leisure over labor
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36
In order to predict the marginal rate of return on investment, producers must forecast theinterest rate.
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37
The marginal rate of return on investment is found by dividing the marginal resource cost peryear by the marginal revenue product.
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38
The reward offered to households to refrain from spending their income on currentconsumption and instead save their income is

A)rent
B)credit
C)utility
D)interest
E)forgone utility
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39
If we assume that a unit of capital will last indefinitely, the marginal rate of return oninvestment equals the marginal revenue product of capital divided by its marginal resourcecost.
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40
If the interest rate increases from 6 percent to 10 percent per year, each $100 saved willearn

A)$4 per year more than before
B)$6 per year more than before
C)$10 per year more than before
D)$16 per year more than before
E)$60 per year more than before
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41
A marginal revenue product curve shows the change in

A)total revenue caused by a one­unit change in output, other things constant
B)total revenue caused by a one­unit change in an input, other things constant
C)total product caused by a one­unit change in output, other things constant
D)total product caused by a one­unit change in an input, other things constant
E)total revenue product caused by a one­unit change in the price of the output, other things constant
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42
For a firm that is a price taker in the product market, all of the following are true except one.Which one is the exception?

A)Marginal revenue product can be found by multiplying price by marginal product.
B)Marginal revenue product is the change in total revenue that results from increasing the use of a resource by one unit, other
Things constant.
C)Marginal revenue product is constant at the prevailing price.
D)Increased output by the firm has no impact on the price of the product.
E)The marginal revenue product curve declines because of diminishing marginal returns.
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43
<strong>  Exhibit 13­3 gives data on the number of tools a certain firm buys to use in its productionprocess.Assume that the tools are expected to last indefinitely, that operating expenses arenegligible, and that the price of the firm's output is expected to remain constant in the future.At what interest rate would the firm in Exhibit 13­3 choose to buy 3 machines?</strong> A)5% B)8% C)12% D)20% E)24% Exhibit 13­3 gives data on the number of tools a certain firm buys to use in its productionprocess.Assume that the tools are expected to last indefinitely, that operating expenses arenegligible, and that the price of the firm's output is expected to remain constant in the future.At what interest rate would the firm in Exhibit 13­3 choose to buy 3 machines?

A)5%
B)8%
C)12%
D)20%
E)24%
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44
<strong>    Exhibit 13­4 shows data gathered by Memo Co.as it prepares to purchase personalcomputers for its sales offices.Given the data in Exhibit 13­4, Memo Co.</strong> A)must be a perfectly competitive seller of output B)must be a monopoly seller of output C)must be a perfectly competitive buyer of personal computers D)cannot be a perfectly competitive buyer of personal computers E)may or may not be a perfectly competitive buyer of personal computers <strong>    Exhibit 13­4 shows data gathered by Memo Co.as it prepares to purchase personalcomputers for its sales offices.Given the data in Exhibit 13­4, Memo Co.</strong> A)must be a perfectly competitive seller of output B)must be a monopoly seller of output C)must be a perfectly competitive buyer of personal computers D)cannot be a perfectly competitive buyer of personal computers E)may or may not be a perfectly competitive buyer of personal computers Exhibit 13­4 shows data gathered by Memo Co.as it prepares to purchase personalcomputers for its sales offices.Given the data in Exhibit 13­4, Memo Co.

A)must be a perfectly competitive seller of output
B)must be a monopoly seller of output
C)must be a perfectly competitive buyer of personal computers
D)cannot be a perfectly competitive buyer of personal computers
E)may or may not be a perfectly competitive buyer of personal computers
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45
<strong>    Suppose that the data in Exhibit 13­2 describes a shop that sells photocopies at $0.10 each.At this price, the marginal revenue product of the fourth machine is</strong> A)$0.10 B)$0.40 C)$4 D)$40 E)$400 <strong>    Suppose that the data in Exhibit 13­2 describes a shop that sells photocopies at $0.10 each.At this price, the marginal revenue product of the fourth machine is</strong> A)$0.10 B)$0.40 C)$4 D)$40 E)$400 Suppose that the data in Exhibit 13­2 describes a shop that sells photocopies at $0.10 each.At this price, the marginal revenue product of the fourth machine is

A)$0.10
B)$0.40
C)$4
D)$40
E)$400
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46
<strong>  One reason for the decline in output with the seventh machine in Exhibit 13­2 could be that</strong> A)the increase in the company's power consumption when seven machines are being used causes its electricity bills to be much Higher B)the increase in the company's power consumption when seven machines are being used causes fuses to blow more often C)no one uses the seventh machine; only six are necessary D)no one uses the seventh machine; only five are necessary E)workers no longer have to wait in line to make copies because more machines are available One reason for the decline in output with the seventh machine in Exhibit 13­2 could be that

A)the increase in the company's power consumption when seven machines are being used causes its electricity bills to be much
Higher
B)the increase in the company's power consumption when seven machines are being used causes fuses to blow more often
C)no one uses the seventh machine; only six are necessary
D)no one uses the seventh machine; only five are necessary
E)workers no longer have to wait in line to make copies because more machines are available
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47
All types of capital

A)are forms of resources that can be used in future production
B)require a physical existence
C)earn an economic rent
D)yield profits for their owners
E)require obtaining more education and job skills
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48
<strong>  Exhibit 13­4 shows data gathered by Memo Co.as it prepares to purchase personalcomputers for its sales offices.Assume that the personal computers are expected to lastindefinitely, that operating expenses are negligible, and that the price of Memo's product isexpected to remain constant in the future.Given the rate of interest, how many personalcomputers will Memo Co.select?</strong> A)40 B)60 C)80 D)100 E)120 Exhibit 13­4 shows data gathered by Memo Co.as it prepares to purchase personalcomputers for its sales offices.Assume that the personal computers are expected to lastindefinitely, that operating expenses are negligible, and that the price of Memo's product isexpected to remain constant in the future.Given the rate of interest, how many personalcomputers will Memo Co.select?

A)40
B)60
C)80
D)100
E)120
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49
<strong>  Exhibit 13­3 gives data on the number of tools a certain firm buys to use in its productionprocess.Assume that the tools are expected to last indefinitely, that operating expenses arenegligible, and that the price of the firm's output is expected to remain constant in the future.At an interest rate of 10 percent, the firm in Exhibit 13­3 should select</strong> A)the maximum number of tools available because price does not decrease as output increases B)the minimum number of tools available because price does not increase as output increases C)three tools D)four tools E)five tools Exhibit 13­3 gives data on the number of tools a certain firm buys to use in its productionprocess.Assume that the tools are expected to last indefinitely, that operating expenses arenegligible, and that the price of the firm's output is expected to remain constant in the future.At an interest rate of 10 percent, the firm in Exhibit 13­3 should select

A)the maximum number of tools available because price does not decrease as output increases
B)the minimum number of tools available because price does not increase as output increases
C)three tools
D)four tools
E)five tools
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50
<strong>  Exhibit 13­4 shows data gathered by Memo Co.as it prepares to purchase personalcomputers for its sales offices.Given the data in Exhibit 13­4, the price of personalcomputers must be</strong> A)$5,000 each B)$500 each C)$250 each D)$200 each E)increasing as Memo Co.purchases more personal computers Exhibit 13­4 shows data gathered by Memo Co.as it prepares to purchase personalcomputers for its sales offices.Given the data in Exhibit 13­4, the price of personalcomputers must be

A)$5,000 each
B)$500 each
C)$250 each
D)$200 each
E)increasing as Memo Co.purchases more personal computers
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51
If a firm can borrow or lend at a 10 percent annual interest rate, it will

A)buy all units of capital with a marginal rate of return above 10 percent
B)buy all units of capital with an average rate of return above 10 percent
C)buy all units of capital with a marginal rate of return below 10 percent
D)buy all units of capital with an average rate of return below 10 percent
E)select only the unit of capital with the highest marginal rate of return, assuming it is above 10 percent
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52
Marginal revenue product for a price taker equals

A)MP × P
B)MP/MRC
C)MP × MRC
D)MRC/MP
E)MP/P
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53
Exhibit 13­3 <strong>Exhibit 13­3   Exhibit 13­3 gives data on the number of tools a certain firm buys to use in its productionprocess.Assume that the tools are expected to last indefinitely, that operating expenses arenegligible, and that the price of the firm's output is expected to remain constant in the future.At an interest rate of 7 percent, the firm in Exhibit 13­3 should select</strong> A)the maximum number of tools available because price does not decrease as output increases B)the minimum number of tools available because price does not increase as output increases C)three tools D)four tools E)five tools Exhibit 13­3 gives data on the number of tools a certain firm buys to use in its productionprocess.Assume that the tools are expected to last indefinitely, that operating expenses arenegligible, and that the price of the firm's output is expected to remain constant in the future.At an interest rate of 7 percent, the firm in Exhibit 13­3 should select

A)the maximum number of tools available because price does not decrease as output increases
B)the minimum number of tools available because price does not increase as output increases
C)three tools
D)four tools
E)five tools
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54
) <strong>)   Exhibit 13­3 gives data on the number of tools a certain firm buys to use in its productionprocess.Assume that the tools are expected to last indefinitely, that operating expenses arenegligible, and that the price of the firm's output is expected to remain constant in the future.At what interest rate would the firm in Exhibit 13­3 choose not to buy any machines?</strong> A)10% B)20% C)30% D)35% E)40% Exhibit 13­3 gives data on the number of tools a certain firm buys to use in its productionprocess.Assume that the tools are expected to last indefinitely, that operating expenses arenegligible, and that the price of the firm's output is expected to remain constant in the future.At what interest rate would the firm in Exhibit 13­3 choose not to buy any machines?

A)10%
B)20%
C)30%
D)35%
E)40%
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55
<strong>  Exhibit 13­4 shows data gathered by Memo Co.as it prepares to purchase personalcomputers for its sales offices.Assume that the personal computers are expected to lastindefinitely, that operating expenses are negligible, and that the price of Memo's product isexpected to remain constant in the future.The marginal rate of return on 60 personalcomputers is closest to</strong> A)19 percent B)24 percent C)30 percent D)52 percent E)520 percent Exhibit 13­4 shows data gathered by Memo Co.as it prepares to purchase personalcomputers for its sales offices.Assume that the personal computers are expected to lastindefinitely, that operating expenses are negligible, and that the price of Memo's product isexpected to remain constant in the future.The marginal rate of return on 60 personalcomputers is closest to

A)19 percent
B)24 percent
C)30 percent
D)52 percent
E)520 percent
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56
) <strong>)     Exhibit 13­4 shows data gathered by Memo Co.as it prepares to purchase personalcomputers for its sales offices.Assume that the personal computers are expected to lastindefinitely, that operating expenses are negligible, and that the price of Memo's output isexpected to remain constant in the future.As the number of personal computers Memo Co.might purchase increases to 120, the marginal rate of return on that kind of capital will</strong> A)decrease from 24 percent and eventually become negative B)rise from 24 percent C)decrease from 24 percent but never become negative D)remain constant because the price of personal computers is constant E)remain constant because the increments being considered are constant <strong>)     Exhibit 13­4 shows data gathered by Memo Co.as it prepares to purchase personalcomputers for its sales offices.Assume that the personal computers are expected to lastindefinitely, that operating expenses are negligible, and that the price of Memo's output isexpected to remain constant in the future.As the number of personal computers Memo Co.might purchase increases to 120, the marginal rate of return on that kind of capital will</strong> A)decrease from 24 percent and eventually become negative B)rise from 24 percent C)decrease from 24 percent but never become negative D)remain constant because the price of personal computers is constant E)remain constant because the increments being considered are constant Exhibit 13­4 shows data gathered by Memo Co.as it prepares to purchase personalcomputers for its sales offices.Assume that the personal computers are expected to lastindefinitely, that operating expenses are negligible, and that the price of Memo's output isexpected to remain constant in the future.As the number of personal computers Memo Co.might purchase increases to 120, the marginal rate of return on that kind of capital will

A)decrease from 24 percent and eventually become negative
B)rise from 24 percent
C)decrease from 24 percent but never become negative
D)remain constant because the price of personal computers is constant
E)remain constant because the increments being considered are constant
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57
The concept of marginal productivity is applicable to

A)all of the following
B)capital
C)entrepreneurial talent
D)land
E)labor
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